When Is There Such a Thing as Good Debt?

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Sophia Bera, CFP is a financial planner for millennials and the Founder of Gen Y Planning. She provides Fee-Only financial planning advice to people in their 20s and 30s across the country. Sophia has been quoted on various websites and publications including Forbes, Business Insider, AOL, Yahoo, Money Magazine, InvestmentNews, and The Huffington Post. She was named one of the “Top Financial Advisors for Millennials” by the website: MoneyUnder30.com. In her free time, Sophia enjoys singing, dancing, and traveling the world while she builds a location independent practice.

Most of the time, the word "debt" has negative connotations. Debt costs you money -- thanks to interest rates -- and therefore takes money away from financial goals like saving and investing. And the stress of carrying and repaying debt can take a serious toll on your health and relationships.

So could there ever be good debt? There's no hard-and-fast answer. That's because how you use debt has a big impact on whether or not you can consider it "good." And you can have too much of a "good" thing -- and that's when it can turn into bad debt.

Yes, you can use debt as a tool. Debt can provide leverage and create opportunities for you to improve your financial situation if you use it wisely. However, it's important to do a cost benefit analysis. Let's consider three types of debt: investing in a college education, buying a home or starting a business.

1. Are Student Loans Always Good Debt?

After working with tons of millennials across the country, I don't think that student loans are always good debt. I've seen quite a few people with high interest rates on private student loans, and I caution you against taking out private student loans for any reason.

I don't think that many people consider how long they'll be paying back their student loans when they take them out.

Another warning: I think that when your student loans cross six figures, you better be making at least six figures for a very long time if you want to pay those off. While I believe that an undergraduate college degree is a baseline for most jobs, I've seen too many people with student loan debt so high you'd think they went to law school when really it was from an undergraduate degree from a private liberal arts college.

I don't think that many people consider how long they'll be paying back their student loans when they take them out. You could be in debt for the next 30 years, and this will have a dramatic effect on the type of job you can take when you graduate. A student loan calculator will help estimate your monthly payments once you graduate.

Student loans aren't necessarily bad. If you take them out to obtain a high-paying job that you could have only secured with a college education and earn enough to make your student loan repayments manageable, your student loan debt was good debt. Here are a few rules of thumb:

Keep your total loans under your projected starting salary when you graduate. If you're able to do that, you should be able to pay them off with the standard 10-year plan.

Cut down on the loan amount. Get college credits while you're in high school, go to a community college for your first two years, stick to a state school and apply for scholarships.

Get a job to pay for your living expenses while you're in school so you don't take out loans for living expenses.

Stay away from private student loans because they don't offer the flexibility of federal loans.

2. How Much Should I Borrow for a Mortgage?

Owning a home used to be considered the American dream, and for many people it still is. Most people need to take out a mortgage for their purchase. If you think you'll be in the same area for several years and can put a 20 percent down payment on a home, a mortgage could be a good long-term investment. Interest rates on mortgages are historically very low, and owning a home can also provide tax benefits. The nice thing about a home is that it's an investment you can live in.

However, I've seen a lot of people who are house-poor. People get so caught up in the whirlwind of buying a home that they spent more than they planned without realizing how this would affect their lifestyle or how they'll pay the mortgage if an emergency came up. Here are a few rules of thumb:

Make a 20 percent down payment so you can avoid paying private mortgage insurance.

Don't use your entire savings account for a down payment. Homes are a hotbed for dipping into your emergency savings. There are far more unexpected expenses that come up than when you're living in an apartment.

Boost your credit score before you buy. Make sure you have a score above 700 so you can qualify for the best mortgage rates available. This will save you thousands of dollars in interest over the life of the loan.

If you think you might move in the next five years, you might want to rent so you don't have to move during a down market and possibly sell your home for a loss.

In figuring out your monthly housing costs, the principal and interest on the mortgage loom large. But don't forget property taxes, insurance, utilities, repairs, landscaping, snow removal and other factors. Make sure that your monthly housing expenses leave room for other expenses so that you're not house-poor.

3. What About Using a Loan to Start a New Business?

I believe that entrepreneurship is the new job security for Gen Y. Incurring debt to start a business can be good debt if the funds help you to build a sustainable livelihood that allows you to repay any money borrowed and improve your financial situation. Just be cautious of how much debt you're taking on. Here are a few rules of thumb:

Do your research and get experience in the field before your launch. Some business opportunities require much bigger up-front investments, which may lead to a small business loan. However, before you start your own restaurant with $100,000 investment, know that the success rate of new restaurants is extremely low.

Debt Costs Money: Use it Wisely

Debt can be good, but only if it helps you leverage your assets to build wealth. Every good debt has the potential to turn bad, so do your research and due diligence. Remember, it costs money to borrow money so be mindful of the interest rate on your loans and pay extra to pay off your debt faster. The fewer monthly obligations you have, the more money you have to fund a lifestyle that you love.

Most of us spend a ton of time researching our options when we first sign up for a plan or policy, then forget all about it and make monthly payments like a robot. But this can cost you.

If you've been on the same cell phone plan for a while, or you haven't looked at the terms of your insurance policies (home, life, auto) since you got them, it's time to do a review. Your circumstances may have changed, and new plans or deductions may have come out since you first signed up. Call up customer service (or your agent) and have them walk you through your options if you're having trouble comparing things on your own.

One of the biggest budget sucks is our own forgetfulness. We miss payments and incur late fees because we've misplaced our statement or didn't manage to get our mail out in time. We fail to save as much as we'd like because we just never remember to do it.

The easiest way to save yourself some money (and hassle and stress) is to set it and forget it. Sign up for auto-pay so your monthly bills are automatically deducted from your checking account. Have a certain amount automatically transferred each month from your checking to your savings account. Remove the human error factor, and your budget will be better for it.

We charge so much nowadays -- whether on credit cards or debit cards -- that it's easy to spend a lot of money without really registering it. When you have a set amount of bills in your wallet, however, it's extremely easy to see how much you've spent so far this month and how much is left.

Take those budget categories of yours -- groceries, entertainment, etc. -- and turn them into real, physical envelopes. At the beginning of each month, put that month's allotment of cash into each envelope. When you're running low, you'll know you need to be careful with your purchases. When you're out, you're done spending on that category till next month.

If you're prone to impulse purchases, imposing a waiting period on yourself is an easy way to break the cycle.

For large purchases, a 30-day waiting list is best. Write down the item that's calling to you, then wait 30 days before allowing yourself to buy it. You may realize in that time that you don't need it after all. Or you may forget why it called to you in the first place.

For smaller impulse buys, like that fancy new product you spotted in the grocery aisle, follow a 10-second rule. Before the item can go into your cart, spend 10 full seconds asking yourself if you really need it and how you will use it. Simply analyzing why you're getting something can disrupt the siren call of a product.

It's all too easy to blow $5, $10, even $20 on something, whether it's an extra meal out or a coffee on the run. In the grand scheme of things, it "doesn't seem like much" to us. But if you start thinking of your money in terms of the time it took you to earn that money, suddenly you find yourself evaluating your spending choices a little closer.

Figure out what you make per hour if you're salaried (if you're hourly, this will be easy). Let's say you make $15 per hour. For every $15 you spend, you'll have to spend another hour of your time at work to pay for that item. A coffee a day for a week can cost you an hour or two. And bigger items, like that flat screen TV you're eyeing? You get the drift. Framing purchases in light of time spent can help you make sure something is worth it.

In the end, a budget is simply a means of making sure your money is working for you. It allows you to see how much you're brining in and allocate it towards the things that are most important to you. If you can hold those bigger goals in mind, everyday budgeting becomes easier.

If you're wondering whether or not to buy something, ask yourself if that money would be better spent towards your big goal. Put a visual reminder in your wallet to keep you on task-like a photo of a sandy beach if you're trying to save up money for a trip. Viewing your budget in terms of what it will allow you accomplish-not the things it won't allow you to buy, can revolutionize your spending.

What surprises me is how people don't work the system of debt.. I told my wife to take on as much student loans as she wants. It doesn't matter because we will never pay them off..

In the words of John Keynes.. "If I owe you a pound, that is my problem. If I owe you a million pounds, then that is your problem."

When you aren't a douche that needs credit, then credit no longer matters. Credit doesn't really exist... Spending your whole life to please the invisible credit score is the very money you will need someday.

I see the same screen names on here from other stories, so I know you people have heard me explain it. Stay living with your parents or in an RV from age 18 to 25, and invest your money at the right time in the business cycle, and you will have a half million dollars after taxes to buy a home.... Or you schmucks can take out a 20 year loan and spend your prime years paying off twice what you paid for that house after all the interest, fees, mandatory insurance, PMI, etc.. If you aren't aged 18 to 25, then sell your crap now while the housing prices are up and move into an RV... Valerie is always talking about old people that can't afford to retire, which is total crap... Live in a $5000 RV, and that social security check/ IRA will suddenly be like living in the Ritz.

You always see old people living in RVs and going to Florida for the winter... With age comes wisdom. The very day my youngest child goes to college, I am moving into a cheap ass RV and parking it at Walmart or out in the country at night. Depending on whether or not the cops in my city, give me the business or not. Screw borrowing to pay for a house, and screw paying for housing altogether.. I feel like an idiot for ever paying property taxes or heating this giant home I live in. I would easily have well over $10 million dollars if I invested all my bill money instead of spending it on consumption.

@ Socio --- Thanks for the insult, Bozo. So nice that you have already labeled yourself as an idiot. Saves me the trouble of having to do that. LOL

I see you are still trying to sell your pipe dream of living in an RV. Good luck with that. Every retail parking lot in the country (including Walmart) has signs posted that prohibit overnight parking for trucks, RV's, etc.

Not everyone aspires to live like crap. Some actually enjoy a house, yard, pool, etc.The author is not quite right here. My first house was 15.5% interest (really), and happy to have it. My payments over the next 8 years almost equaled the profit I made when I sold it. If you buy the right property near the bottom of the market, you can make money today even if you pay 5.25% plus PMI. The operative words are "the right property". There are houses out there where the mortgage payment with tax and insurance is still less than rent. Research, research, research.

Recovery without job participation,all based in an unsustainable DEBT.Any thinking American that falls in that trap is a moron.Every single day,we manufacture less and less,and the Nation gets poorer and poorer like a 3 world banana republic....Is that our future?

Let me tell you folks----stop this borrowing business---Take as many as AP classes while you are in high school and go to a community college (sometimes you can take co9llege courses while you are in high school) and try to pay as much as you can. Also find out the cost of the tuition in Canada, Europe, Asia, South America and Caribbean Universities.

Now let me get to good debt. (This is not possible now a days but it did happened in 1970s). Some students borrowed at 3% interest rate and deposited that money in Bank CDs at 7 and 8% rates. That was smart.